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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 26
Issue 2 |
| Apr 01, 2003 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 26 :
Issue 2
Table of Contents
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Cooperation, psychological game theory, and limitations of rationality in social interaction

Andrew M. Colman
Page 139-153
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Cooperation, evolution, and culture

Michael Alvard
Page 153-154
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Humans should be individualistic and utility-maximizing, but not necessarily rational

Pat Barclay and Martin Daly
Page 154-155
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Neural game theory and the search for rational agents in the brain

Gregory S. Berns
Page 155-156
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Evolution, the emotions, and rationality in social interaction

David J. Butler
Page 156-157
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Behavioral game theory: Plausible formal models that predict accurately

Colin F. Camerer
Page 157-158
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Beliefs, intentions, and evolution: Old versus new psychological game theory

Jeffrey P. Carpenter and Peter Hans Matthews
Page 158-159
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To have and to eat cake: The biscriptive role of game-theoretic explanations of human choice behavior

William D. Casebeer and James E. Parco
Page 159-160
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A critique of team and Stackelberg reasoning

Herbert Gintis
Page 160-161
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Experience and decisions

Edmund Fantino and Stephanie Stolarz-Fantino
Page 160-160
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How to play if you must

Hans Haller
Page 161-162
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Whats a face worth: Noneconomic factors in game playing

Peter J. B. Hancock and Lisa M. DeBruine
Page 162-163
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Rational belief and social interaction

Daniel M. Hausman
Page 163-164
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The limits of individualism are not the limits of rationality

Susan Hurley
Page 164-165
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Coordination and cooperation

Maarten C. W. Janssen
Page 165-166
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Which is to blame: Instrumental rationality, or common knowledge?

Matt Jones and Jun Zhang
Page 166-167
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Analogy in decision-making, social interaction, and emergent rationality

Boicho Kokinov
Page 167-168
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Wanted: A reconciliation of rationality with determinism

Joachim I. Krueger
Page 168-169
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Lets cooperate to understand cooperation

John Lazarus
Page 169-170
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Game theory need not abandon individual maximization

John Monterosso and George Ainslie
Page 171-171
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Second-order indeterminacy

Marco Perugini
Page 171-172
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Chance, utility, rationality, strategy, equilibrium

Anatol Rapoport
Page 172-173
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Why not go all the way

Richard Schuster
Page 173-174
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Locally rational decision-making

Richard M. Shiffrin
Page 175-175
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Was you ever bit by a dead bee? Evolutionary games and dominated strategies

Karl Sigmund
Page 175-176
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Irrationality, suboptimality, and the evolutionary context

Mark Steer and Innes Cuthill
Page 176-177
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Bridging psychology and game theory yields interdependence theory

Paul A. M. Van Lange and Marcello Gallucci
Page 177-178
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Toward a cognitive game theory

Ivaylo Vlaev and Nick Chater
Page 178-179
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From rationality to coordination

Paul Weirich
Page 179-180
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Beyond rationality: Rigor without mortis in game theory

Andrew M. Colman
Page 180-192
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From mouth to hand: Gesture, speech, and the evolution of right-handedness

Michael C. Corballis
Page 199-208
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Myths of first cause and asymmetries in human evolution

Marian Annett
Page 208-209
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Protosign and protospeech: An expanding spiral

Michael A. Arbib
Page 209-210
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Is gestural communication more sophisticated than vocal communication in wild chimpanzees?

Adam Clark Arcadi
Page 210-211
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Creative solution to an old problem

David F. Armstrong
Page 211-212
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Going for Broca? I wouldnt bet on it!

Alan A. Beaton
Page 212-213
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Gesture in language evolution: Could I but raise my hand to it!

John L. Bradshaw
Page 213-214
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Lateralisation may be a side issue for understanding language development

Caterina Breitenstein, Agnes Floel, Bianca Drger and Stefan Knecht
Page 214-214
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Vocalisation and the development of hand preference

Chris Code
Page 215-216
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A shrug is not a sentence

Andrew Carstairs-McCarthy
Page 215-215
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Hemispheric dominance has its origins in the control of the midline organs of speech

Norman D. Cook
Page 216-217
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Right-handedness may have come first: Evidence from studies in human infants and nonhuman primates

Daniela Corbetta
Page 217-218
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Pumping for gestural origins: The well may be rather dry

Rick Dale, Daniel C. Richardson and Michael J. Owren
Page 218-219
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Possible phylogenies: The role of hypotheses, weak inferences, and falsification

Thomas E. Dickins
Page 219-220
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Are human gestures in the present time a mere vestige of a former sign language? Probably not

Pierre Feyereisen
Page 220-221
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Handedness: Neutral or adaptive?

Charlotte Faurie and Michel Raymond
Page 220-220
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Unbalanced human apes and syntax

Roger S. Fouts and Gabriel Waters
Page 221-222
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Work and talk handedness and the stuff of life

Grant. R. Gillett
Page 222-223
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Was a manual gesturing stage really necessary?

Ralph L. Holloway
Page 223-224
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Brodmanns area 44, gestural communication, and the emergence of right handedness in chimpanzees

William D. Hopkins and Claudio Cantalupo
Page 224-225
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The hand leads the mouth in ontogenesis too

Jana M. Iverson and Esther Thelen
Page 225-226
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Mirror neurons, Brocas area and language: Reflecting on the evidence

Scott H. Johnson-Frey
Page 226-227
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Dual asymmetries in handedness

Gregory V. Jones and Maryanne Martin
Page 227-228
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What functional imaging of the human brain can tell about handedness and language

Goulven Josse and Nathalie Tzourio-Mazoyer
Page 228-229
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From mouth to mouth and hand to hand: On language evolution

Uwe Jrgens
Page 229-230
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From past to present: Speech, gesture, and brain in present-day human communication

Spencer D. Kelly
Page 230-231
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The secret of lateralisation is trust

Chris Knight
Page 231-232
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Integration of visual and vocal communication: Evidence for Miocene origins

David A. Leavens
Page 232-233
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Mouth to hand and back again? Could language have made those journeys?

Peter F. MacNeilage
Page 233-234
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Ontogenetic constraints on the evolution of right-handedness

George F. Michel
Page 234-235
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Did they talk their way out of Africa?

Toby M. Pearce
Page 235-236
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Laterality probabilities fluctuate during ontogenetic development

Arve Vorland Pedersen and Beatrix Vereijken
Page 236-237
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A zetetics perspective on gesture, speech, and the evolution of right-handedness

Amir Raz and Opher Donchin
Page 237-238
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Developmentally, the arm preference precedes handedness

Louise Rnnqvist
Page 238-239
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The left hemisphere as the redundant hemisphere

Iris E. C. Sommer and Ren S. Kahn
Page 239-240
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Misleading asymmetries of brain structure

Stephen F. Walker
Page 240-241
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Why homolaterality of language and hand dominance may not be the expression of a specific evolutionary link

Bencie Woll and Jechil S. Sieratzki
Page 241-241
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Causal beliefs lead to toolmaking, which require handedness for motor control

Lewis Wolpert
Page 242-242
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Hand-to-hand combat, or mouth-to-mouth resuscitation?

Michael C. Corballis
Page 242-250
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